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Dive into the research topics where Mays F. Al-Naday is active.

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Featured researches published by Mays F. Al-Naday.


communication systems and networks | 2014

A cache-aware routing scheme for information-centric networks

Vassilios G. Vassilakis; Mays F. Al-Naday; Martin J. Reed; Bander A. Alzahrani; Kun Yang; Ioannis D. Moscholios; Michael D. Logothetis

In recent years, the information-centric networking (ICN) concept has been attracting increasing attention of the research community. The aim is to overcome intrinsic inefficiencies of the existing host-to-host communication paradigm, as well as to provide new and enhanced services to mobile and fixed users. A key feature of ICN is the support for in-network content caching. In this paper, we present a new cache-aware routing scheme for ICN. Our scheme takes into account the information about the locations of caches in the network and constructs delivery paths for efficient content dissemination. The proposed approach does not impose additional signaling overhead in the network; while at the same time it is agnostic of the cached contents. The performance of the proposed scheme is verified by simulation studies, which show an up to 50% delay reduction compared to traditional routing approaches.


global communications conference | 2014

Quality of service in an information-centric network

Mays F. Al-Naday; Andreas Bontozoglou; Vassilios G. Vassilakis; Martin J. Reed

QoS provisioning is one of the key challenges facing current as well as future Internet architectures. Its dependency on content recognition does not allow a straightforward support of QoS in the IP, host-centric, model. In contrast, Information-Centric Networking (ICN) offers native content identification in the network, which can be exploited to develop a common, elegant, framework for supporting QoS-based delivery. Therefore, ICN may naturally overcome many of the cumbersome fixes and limitations of todays solutions. In this work, we exploit the flexibility in semantic representation offered by ICN to present a flexible and scalable ICN-based QoS model. Our model defines QoS requirements as information items that can be linked to the content at various aggregation levels, independent of the communication approach. Therefore, it can be applied uniformly to various network types and hierarchies. Furthermore, our model offers enhanced traffic treatment as well as resource utilization while significantly reducing the overhead on the network.


Photonic Network Communications | 2012

Design proposal of a photonic multicast Bloom filter node

Mays F. Al-Naday; Raul C. Almeida; Kenneth M. Guild; Martin J. Reed

This paper presents the design of a hardware accelerated forwarding architecture for processing packets that are labelled with a Bloom Filter (BF)-based header. The architecture consists of a conventional broadcast-and-select all-optical switching fabric, composed of Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers (SOAs), and a hardware-based Serial Processing Unit (SPU) that uses an on-the-fly processing mechanism to forward optical packets. The proposed SPU avoids the use of memory units and uses a small number of logic gates that facilitate a straightforward all-optical implementation using photonic logic gates. The SPU also supports flexible wavelength multicasting by allowing each incoming wavelength to be forwarded to any number of output ports. Contention resolution is provided by the introduction of an Optical Delay Line (ODL) that provides a single-packet optical buffer if the output channel is occupied.


international conference on communications | 2017

Seamless handover in IP over ICN networks: A coding approach

Mohammed Al-Khalidi; Nikolaos Thomos; Martin J. Reed; Mays F. Al-Naday; Dirk Trossen

Seamless connectivity plays a key role in realizing QoS-based delivery in mobile networks. However, current handover mechanisms hinder the ability to meet this target, due to the high ratio of handover failures, packet loss and service interruption. These challenges are further magnified in Heterogeneous Cellular Networks (HCN) such as Advanced Long Term Evolution (LTE-Advanced) and LTE in unlicensed spectrum (LTE-LAA), due to the variation in handover requirements. Although mechanisms, such as Fast Handover for Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PFMIPv6), attempt to tackle these issues; they come at a high cost with sub-optimal outcomes. This primarily stems from various limitations of existing IP core networks. In this paper we propose a novel handover solution for mobile networks, exploiting the advantages of a revolutionary IP over Information-Centric Networking (IP-over-ICN) architecture in supporting flexible service provisioning through anycast and multicast, combined with the advantages of random linear coding techniques in eliminating the need for retransmissions. Our solution allows coded traffic to be disseminated in a multicast fashion during handover phase from source directly to the destination(s), without the need for an intermediate anchor as in exiting solutions; thereby, overcoming packet loss and handover failures, while reducing overall delivery cost. We evaluate our approach with an analytical and simulation model showing significant cost reduction compared to PFMIPv6.


IEEE ACM Transactions on Networking | 2017

Information-Centric Multilayer Networking: Improving Performance Through an ICN/WDM Architecture

Mays F. Al-Naday; Nikolaos Thomos; Martin J. Reed

Information-centric networking (ICN) facilitates content identification in networks and offers parametric representation of content semantics. This paper proposes an ICN/WDM network architecture that uses these features to offer superior network utilization, in terms of performance and power consumption. The architecture introduces an ICN publish/subscribe communication approach to the wavelength layer, whereby content is aggregated according to its popularity rank into wavelength-size groups that can be published and subscribed to by multiple nodes. Consequently, routing and wavelength assignment (RWA) algorithms benefit from anycast to identify multiple sources of aggregate content and allow optimization of the source selection of light paths. A power-aware algorithm, maximum degree of connectivity, has been developed with the objective of exploiting this flexibility to address the tradeoff between power consumption and network performance. The algorithm is also applicable to IP architectures, albeit with less flexibility. Evaluation results indicate the superiority of the proposed ICN architecture, even when utilizing conventional routing methods, compared with its IP counterpart. The results further highlight the performance improvement achieved by the proposed algorithm, compared with the conventional RWA methods, such as shortest-path first fit.


conference on information-centric networking | 2016

Realizing IP-based Services over an Information-Centric Networking Transport Network

Sung-Yeon Kim; Sebastian Robitzsch; Dirk Trossen; Martin J. Reed; Mays F. Al-Naday; Janne Riihijärvi

Information-centric networking (ICN) has been actively studied as a promising alternative to the IP-based Internet architecture with potential benefits in terms of network efficiency, privacy, security, and novel applications. However, it is difficult to adopt such wholesale replacement of the IP-based Internet to a new routing and service infrastructure due to the conflict among existing stakeholders, market players, and solution providers. To overcome these difficulties, we provide an evolutionary approach by which we enable the expected benefits of ICN for existing services. The demonstration shows that these benefits can be efficiently introduced and work with existing IP end-systems.


IEEE Network | 2014

Information resilience: Source recovery in an information-centric network

Mays F. Al-Naday; Martin J. Reed; Dirk Trossen; Kun Yang


international conference on communications | 2016

Stateless multicast switching in software defined networks

Martin J. Reed; Mays F. Al-Naday; Nikolaos Thomos; Dirk Trossen; George Petropoulos; Spiros Spirou


european conference on networks and communications | 2018

IP Over ICN Goes Live

George Xylomenos; Yannis Thomas; Xenofon Vasilakos; Michael Georgiades; Alexander Phinikarides; Ioannis Doumanis; Stuart Porter; Dirk Trossen; Sebastian Robitzsch; Martin J. Reed; Mays F. Al-Naday; George Petropoulos; Konstantinos V. Katsaros; Maria-Evgenia Xezonaki; Janne Riihijärvi


arXiv: Networking and Internet Architecture | 2018

fCDN: A Flexible and Efficient CDN Infrastructure without DNS Redirection or Content Reflection.

Mays F. Al-Naday; Martin J. Reed; Janne Riihijärvi; Dirk Trossen; Nikolaos Thomos; Mohammed Al-Khalidi

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